kewney

Running out of puff

Hype can sometimes presage significant advances, but more often it is used to hide impending failure

Written by Guy Kewney

Five years ago, Bernadette Mulcahy was strategic product manager for Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) technology at LogicaCMG. In particular, she was in charge of turning round the downturn in sales of multimedia messaging switches.

According to Mulcahy at the time, business applications were the future of MMS. “Whatever the uncertainties about MMS, one thing is clear ­ its potential is much greater than current consumer applications. It will rapidly be at the heart of many businesses, changing working practices and positively affecting the bottom line,” she explained.

As it happens, I have finally found a phone on which sending pictures and video to other phones and to web sites is not a complete pain in the proverbial. The other day I was playing with the “photographer’s phone” ­ the Nokia N82 ­ and it does indeed take the occasional excellent 5 megapixel shot. Also, it can easily be persuaded to send photos and video across the air.

The trouble is, you have to decide which. An MMS photograph is limited to the sort of low-res snap that ­ just about ­ can be used to prove you really are in the airport, and not in some seedy dive. An MMS video is short, blurry, and is only a “moving picture” if nothing in the shot actually moves, for a minute.

The essential uselessness of MMS for any serious purpose was defined by LogicaCMG as a “niggle”, as were its other failings, such as the fact that five years ago, if you were a Vodafone user, you could only send to other Vodafone subscribers.

Mulcahy’s arguments were, in truth, nothing more than an empty piece of puffery dressed up as a serious attempt to revive a standard that had “massive potential”. This kind of hype is a fact of life in the IT sector. The job of us technology journalists is to ascertain whether there is anything of real substance lurking behind it.

If we look at, say, WiMax puffery, which is rife just now, can we see whether this is another last-ditch attempt to create a bit of hoopla for a failed technology, or a serious “surge” of all the people involved to create a useful business tool?

I can tell you which option I’d pick.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Linux penguin

Microsoft management suite adds non-Windows support

Move could benefit firms struggling with a diverse range of operating systems and software 30 Apr 2008

 

Business review: BlackBerry Curve

RIM’s new BlackBerry 8300 Curve offers all the mobile business essentials in a slim and light format 17 May 2007

3 to cut roaming charges

Mobile firm 3 announces end of roaming charges 22 Jan 2007

Comment: Nokia explores the 3G frontier

The dual-mode, MMS-enabled Nokia 6650 videophone is being aimed at consumers, but it could also serve as a useful testbed for mobile business applications, says Bill Pechey 25 Oct 2002

Intel smartens phones

GSM, GPRS and application processing supported by a single chip 17 Feb 2003

Computeractive review of 2007

A look back at the good and bad events of the year 21 Dec 2007

related whitepapers

today's top stories

CIOs must embrace collaboration tools

Author Don Tapscott gives Angelica Mari his reasons for promoting social networking tools and says transparency is the key to security 04 Dec 2008

On a quest to build a connected society

BT Design’s JP Rangaswami talks to Gareth Morgan about his pivotal role in the telecoms giant’s efforts to deliver universal broadband and his plans to tap into the creativity of the open source community 04 Dec 2008

IT leaders must stand by India

A sense of perspective is the most important response from IT leaders to the attacks in Mumbai 04 Dec 2008

Case study: Clifford Chance

Law firm implements Sun platform and reduces datacentres to gain efficiency and cost synergies 03 Dec 2008

Should CRM be more sociable?

As vendors rush to add more social networking bells and whistles to their CRM products, some experts warn that users must tread carefully when venturing into online communities 03 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Is India becoming a risky destination?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Padlocked CDVideo

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT

The insurance giant outlines its new outsourcing strategy; and we ask if the government's economic bailout will affect its IT plans 28 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Doctors looking at a computerAnalysis

Watchdog wants IT to cure privacy woes

Information Commissioner Richard Thomas is urging organisations to put privacy protection at the top of their procurement and development criteria 04 Dec 2008

Colin McDonaldComment

Web 2.0 has potential to transform staff training

Employees can sharpen their IT skills through using the latest interactive training tools, writes Colin McDonald 04 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation